Net Worth: | $70 Million |
---|---|
Date of Birth: | September 14, 1940 (84 years old) |
Gender: | Male |
Height: | 5 ft 8 in (1.75 m) |
Profession: | Coach, Basketball player, Basketball Coach, and Athlete |
Nationality: | United States of America |
Larry Brown is an American Basketball Coach, Athlete, and Player who has a net worth of $70 million. A three-time ABA All-Star, All-Star MVP, and member of the All-ABA Second Team, Brown was a champion of the ABA as a player.
Larry began his coaching career for North Carolina as an assistant. He first held the position of head coach with the ABA’s Carolina Cougars before moving on to the ABA and NBA’s Denver Nuggets.
Prior to coaching the New Jersey Nets in the NBA from 1981 to 1983, Brown coached the UCLA Bruins from 1979 to 1981. In order to coach the Kansas Jayhawks from 1983 through 1988, he returned to college.
Then he went back to coaching in the NBA, working with the Charlotte Bobcats, Detroit Pistons, Los Angeles Clippers, Indiana Pacers, Philadelphia 76ers, San Antonio Spurs, and Los Angeles Clippers.
Early Life
On the 14th of September, 1940, Larry Brown was birthed into a Jewish family in Brooklyn, New York. While he was still a teenager, Milton his father kicked the bucket leaving Larry and his elder brother Herbert.
Educational Attainment
Later, Larry enrolled in the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where he competed for the Tar Heels as a basketball player under the guidance of Dean Smith and Frank McGuire.
Salary and Career Earnings
Larry Brown has made well over $150 million in his coaching career after accounting for inflation. From the Pistons and Knicks between 2003 and 2006, Larry alone earned $45.5 million. This works out to $187,000 for every game that is coached. 331 days and $28.5 million later, he was The Knicks’ coach.
 Sporting Career
After it was determined that Larry Brown was too little to play in the NBA, he started his post-collegiate basketball career with the Akron Wingfoots of the National AAU Basketball League.
In his first of two seasons with the team, he led the Wingfoots to the AAU National Championship.
Larry also participated in the 1964 Summer Olympics in Tokyo as a member of the US men’s team, where he earned the gold medal.
He briefly worked as an assistant coach at his alma mater UNC before joining a variety of clubs in the American Basketball Association.
In the late 1960s and early 1970s, Larry played for the Denver Rockets, New Orleans Buccaneers, Oakland Oaks, Washington Caps, and Virginia Squires.
He ended up leading the ABA in assists overall with 2,509 at the end of his playing career.
Career as a coach, 1969–1992
Following a brief coaching career in 1969 at Davidson College, Larry served as the head coach of the ABA’s Carolina Cougars from 1972 to 1974. After that, he served as the head coach of the Denver Nuggets while they made the move from the ABA to the NBA from 1974 until 1979.
In order to coach for UCLA, he returned to collegiate basketball in 1979 and did so until 1981. He then spent two seasons as the New Jersey Nets head coach in the NBA.
Larry started working as a coach for the University of Kansas in 1983, getting back into the college basketball scene. he took over as head coach of the Jayhawks after the club had endured two straight losing campaigns.
He immediately turned around the team’s fortunes, leading them to a 22-10 record in his first season. The next year, with a 35-4 record and a trip to the Final Four, he achieved even greater success.
When Larry guided the Jayhawks to several NCAA upsets on way to the Championship title in the 1987–88 season, his final at Kansas, he cemented his status as an all-time coaching great.
He returned to the NBA to coach for the San Antonio Spurs following his successful time at the University of Kansas. Larry’s subsequent leadership helped the squad win the Midwest Division two times in a row and improve from its poorest record in franchise history to its best. Up to his dismissal in early 1992, he was the Spurs’ head coach.
1992 to the current coaching career
Larry Brown became the head coach of the Los Angeles Clippers less than a month after being let go by the Spurs. He gave the struggling Clippers new life, just as he had done with other teams, and guided them to their first successful campaign since moving to Los Angeles.
Before quitting in 1993, Larry also steered the squad to two straight berths in the postseason. Brown later served as the Indiana Pacers head coach, guiding the team to its first two conference final appearances.
He left in 1997 and went on to lead the Philadelphia 76ers as their head coach. He took the 76ers with him to the NBA Finals in 2001. In 2003, Larry left the group.
He started working as a coach with the Detroit Pistons the next year, and in his debut campaign, he helped the team win the NBA Championship.
Soon after, Larry guided the US men’s basketball team to a bronze medal in the Summer Olympics in Athens while serving as its head coach. The remainder of his contract was bought out by the Pistons the following summer.
Larry then agreed to a five-year deal to become the New York Knicks head coach. He achieved his 1,000th NBA win as a coach in the 2005–06 season, his first with the group.
Nevertheless, he also oversaw the Knicks’ miserable 23-59 record and attracted criticism for publicly arguing with a number of his own players. Brown was consequently let go after just one season.
With the Charlotte Bobcats from 2008 to 2010, he took on his next coaching position. Notably, he steered the group to their inaugural playoff berth. After a dismal 2010–11 season, Brown left the Bobcats.
Following that, he was appointed head coach at Southern Methodist University, where he led the Mustangs to their first NCAA Tournament berth in more than 20 years.
The NCAA, however, penalized him the following year for failing to report a fraud perpetrated on one of his athletes’ behalf in the academic setting.
In 2016, Larry left SMU. Two years later, he was fired mid-season from his position as coach of the Italian basketball team Auxilium Torino after going 5-19. The next year, he joined the University of Memphis’ coaching staff as an assistant.
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